DeSePtion: Dual Sequence Prediction and Adversarial Examples for Improved Fact-Checking (2004.12864v1)
Abstract: The increased focus on misinformation has spurred development of data and systems for detecting the veracity of a claim as well as retrieving authoritative evidence. The Fact Extraction and VERification (FEVER) dataset provides such a resource for evaluating end-to-end fact-checking, requiring retrieval of evidence from Wikipedia to validate a veracity prediction. We show that current systems for FEVER are vulnerable to three categories of realistic challenges for fact-checking -- multiple propositions, temporal reasoning, and ambiguity and lexical variation -- and introduce a resource with these types of claims. Then we present a system designed to be resilient to these "attacks" using multiple pointer networks for document selection and jointly modeling a sequence of evidence sentences and veracity relation predictions. We find that in handling these attacks we obtain state-of-the-art results on FEVER, largely due to improved evidence retrieval.
- Christopher Hidey (8 papers)
- Tuhin Chakrabarty (33 papers)
- Tariq Alhindi (7 papers)
- Siddharth Varia (7 papers)
- Kriste Krstovski (8 papers)
- Mona Diab (71 papers)
- Smaranda Muresan (47 papers)